Jay said, âBridie? You're not saying anything.'
âI'm just getting used to it. I thought you were going to say you were a werewolf or something. A Christian, that's ⦠interesting.'
âI was scared to tell you. I thought you and Stella would think it was uncool. I was ⦠I guess I was embarrassed. And tonight, when I saw your friends â¦' âThey're not
my
friends,' I said quickly. âNot really Stella's either, she only knows Bailey from soccer.'
There was a pause.
âYou really think it's interesting?'
âYeah.' I thought about it. âYeah, I do. I don't know much about God and religion and ⦠everything.' As far as I knew, I'd never met a Christian before, not a proper one. Apart from Nana Kincaid. And Jay and Nana Kincaid were
not
the same thing.
Jay cleared his throat. âIf you wanted to, you could come to our church, check it out? My dad's the pastor â Pastor Matt. It's Northside Church, have you heard of it? And Elliot's a youth leader.'
âSo it's a family affair.'
âYeah, kind of ⦠anyway, you're welcome to come along.'
My mouth was open to say,
thanks but no thanks, I'm not really
a church person,
but instead I heard myself say, âOkay, maybe I will.' The vodka must have still been racing round my veins; but the weird thing was, at that moment, I
was
interested. Since the war was declared, there'd been a lot of talk about God â our God and their God â so maybe it was time to find out what all the fuss was about.
âStella's welcome, too. Do you think she'd come?'
âShe
might
.' I looked doubtfully over my shoulder to where she was lying on the grass, singing to herself. âI'll ask her.' I glanced sideways at Jay. âIt's interesting to meet someone who ⦠believes in something.'
âIt would be so great if you could both come,' said Jay earnestly. âI'm sure God sent you for a reason. You know, last Saturday. You saved me. Wouldn't it be amazing if I helped save you?'
âUm ⦠yeah.' I didn't know what to make of that. Saved? From what exactly, what did that mean?
An old blue car drew up to the kerb and Jay jumped to his feet. âElliot! Over here!'
âHi there,' said a dry voice, and Elliot leaned out the window. I scrambled up and brushed myself off. âGot a casualty, have we?'
âShe had a bit too much to drink,' I said.
Elliot grimaced. âThink she'll chuck in my car?'
âI don't
think
so,' I said cautiously. âShe's been sick twice, I'm pretty sure it's all gone.'
âNice,' said Elliot. âAll right, hop in. I suppose you want to sober her up before you take her home? We'd better find a cafe.'
I hauled Stella to her feet and she weaved her way over to the car. â
Hi!
' she said brightly to Elliot. âHave we met before?'
âYou might want toâ' Elliot gestured to his chest.
I thought he meant me; involuntarily I glanced down, my cheeks burning.
âHer top,' said Elliot. âBefore we go anywhere in public?'
âOh, right.' Hastily I buttoned Stella back into her shirt and shoved her into the car. âThis is really nice of you,' I burbled as I struggled to fasten Stella's seatbelt.
Elliot shrugged as he pulled out into the street. âWhat goes around,' he said enigmatically, and ruffled his brother's hair. âHow are you, mate?' he asked quietly.
âYeah, good,' said Jay, but he sat there in silence, either from exhaustion or shyness or sheer embarrassment, while Stella sang along to the radio and told us all how much she loved us, and Elliot drove on grimly, a scowl set on his face.
He found a cafe and we poured herbal tea and water into Stella and she started to look less pale and more connected to reality.
âMake her drink plenty of water before she goes to bed,' said Elliot. âYou staying at her place?'
âShe's staying at mine.'
âGood. She'll be pretty sick in the morning.' He said to Jay, âDrink up, mate. We've got an early start.'
Jay swilled his hot chocolate. âFirst service is at ten,' he told me. âDad likes us to go.'
Elliot's eyebrow shot up; obviously he was surprised Jay had told us about their church. Perhaps he knew from experience that it wasn't the world's best pick-up line.
âYou can come, too, if you like,' said Jay.
âI don't think they'll be going anywhere tomorrow morning, Jay,' said Elliot, and he flicked a quick sceptical glance at me that said more clearly than words that he didn't expect us to turn up to their church
ever
. I stared right back; he might get a big shock one day.
The whole exchange went right over Stella's head; she was squinting at a sugar tube. âHow do they get the sugar
in
there?
It's such a weeny little hole â¦' Elliot threw some money on the table. âLet's go,' he growled. âThe Elliot Ridley Taxi Service turns into a pumpkin at midnight.'
MUM WAS SURPRISED to see us. âI told you to call, I was waiting,' she said. âI don't like you taking lifts from strange men.'
Mum worries too much. I nearly told her Elliot was a church youth leader but I wasn't ready to break that news to Stella yet. Instead I said, âHe wasn't a stranger, he was Jay's brother, the guy from the peace rally.'
âThat
is
a stranger. Next timeâ' Mum broke off as Stella gave a huge yawn and sagged against the wall. Her eye makeup was all smudged; she looked like a skinny, bedraggled panda. Suddenly I was so tired I could hardly stand up either.
Mum raised her hands. âOff you go. And plenty of water before youââ'
âBefore we go to bed, yeah, yeah, I've got the message.' I pushed Stella into my room and she promptly collapsed onto the bed and began to snore. I had to wake her up to tip a bottle of water down her throat before she passed out again. I toppled onto the spare mattress like a fallen tree, and suddenly it was morning.
Stella's pale, panda face gave me an agonised stare over the edge of the bed. She whispered, âTell me it was all a bad dream?'
I rolled over in my sleeping-bag and pretended to think hard. âHmm, let's see ⦠No, pretty much all true, I'm afraid.'
âOh,
God
.' Stella's face abruptly vanished. Her disembodied voice begged, âWhich parts?'
âThe getting trashed part, the flirting with Jay part, the throwing up in the pool partâ'
âOkay, stop! Ow, my head. I feel terrible.' There was a pause. âI threw up in the
pool
?'
âMmm. But on the plus side, guess what? Jay's a born-again Christian.'
âYou
what
? You're joking. Bridie, this a joke, right?'
âWell, he's some kind of Christian. He told me while we were waiting for Elliot to pick us up.'
âOh, yeah, Elliot ⦠I remember now ⦠Jay's a
Christian
?' Another pause. âSo I guess he was really impressed with the whole getting-wasted, throwing-up thing?'
âHe was cool, actually.' I propped myself on my elbow, thinking back. âHe called Elliot to get us, and he was really sweet to you.'
âYeah?' said Stella hopefully. âWhat did he do?'
âUm â¦' Maybe that was a stretch. âHe invited us to his church?'
âHow romantic,' groaned Stella. âI can't believe I've got a crush on a
Christian
.'
I noted that her feelings for Jay had already been downgraded from âin love' to mere âcrush'. For some perverse reason this annoyed me.
âHe's still the same person,' I said crossly; my head was throbbing too. âJust because he goes to church, so what? Just because he believes in something.'
âHey.' Stella pointed her finger at me. âI'm the one who goes to Catholic school, remember? I've got enough Christians in my life without adding to the collection.'
âI told him we'd think about it.'
âAbout
going to church
? Are you crazy?'
âHe's nice. Elliot's nice. How bad can it be?'
Stella squinted at me. âYou've never been to church, have you? I have, heaps of times, with Nana, and it's
God-awful
.'
It took a second for that to sink in, then we both giggled.
âI suppose that's exactly what it's meant to be,' I said. âGodly and full of awe.'
âShut up and get out of my way.' Stella swung her legs over the bed. âI feel
sick
.'
We went back and forth on it a few times over the next week. Stella was torn between being so mortified that she never wanted to see Jay again, and wanting to show him what a nice wholesome girl she really was. I guess I was just intrigued. I did genuinely like Jay (and Elliot, sort of â not that that was relevant). I thought it was gutsy of Jay to confess something so deeply uncool, and I was curious. No one had ever offered to introduce me to God before.
We looked up Northside Church on the internet on Monday night, before Mum came home. After her rant about religious schools, I wasn't about to tell her I was considering going to an actual church.
âWow, it's big. They've got branches all over the city.'
âIt's a franchise, it's the Chicken Hut of churches ⦠look!' Stella's finger stabbed Elliot's photo on the screen. âThere's grumpy-pants.'
âYouth Outreach Program,' I read. âDo you think they're just trying to recruit us?'
âDer! That's what Christians
do
. That's their job â they convert people.'
In the end, we decided to go. I stayed over at Stella's on Saturday, which wasn't unusual, but I didn't exactly tell Mum what our plans were for Sunday. We worked out that we could catch the train and walk to the church; it was right at the end of the line.
âDress up,' ordered Stella. âNice frocks. Nana always made me wear a nice frock when we went to Mass.'
Seeing as how we weren't six years old any more, we couldn't quite stretch to nice frocks, but we both wore skirts and tights. Knee-length skirts. I wore a neat buttoned-up shirt and Stella wore a skivvy. âVery modest,' she said with satisfaction, turning in front of the mirror. I felt as if we were dressing up as nuns â not the old-fashioned sort, with headdresses and flowing robes, but boring modern nuns, in cardigans, with bad hair.
âHave you noticed how Christians always have bad hair?' said Stella when we were on the train at last.
âGod doesn't care what they look like,' I said. âHe wants them to worry about helping other people, not trivial things like hair.'
âLook who's the expert now!'
âShut up,' I mumbled. Okay, maybe I had read the Northside website, maybe I'd done a little Christian research. I didn't understand a lot of it, but the parts about helping others and being grateful for the world made sense to me. Wasn't that what Stella and I believed in? Only we called it being âpolitically active' and âenvironmentally aware'.
âAnyway,' I added. âJay's got good hair.'
âHuh,' said Stella.
We nearly got lost between the station and the church. Stella has a problem with left and right; according to her, I have a problem with east and west. We were still bickering when we found it: a big, low, grey-brown building with an enormous cross on the front wall, and a sea of cars all around, and a swarm of people hurrying inside.
âWow,' said Stella. âIt's bigger than St John's, where Nana goes.'
We hung back, watching, both suddenly shy and self-conscious. Our clothes were totally wrong. We'd got the modest skirts right, but I'd never seen so much cleavage. Everyone was certainly dressed up, but not in ânice frocks'. I felt like an idiot in my chaste shirt and lace-up shoes. I was on the verge of whispering
let's go
to Stella, when Jay shouted our names.
He was wearing a proper black eye-patch, waving and grinning from ear to ear. âI can't believe you came! Wow, you look ⦠different.' He glanced at his watch. âWe're about to start. We all sit down the front. My family, I mean. Do you want to sit with us?'
âUm ⦠I think we'd feel more comfortable up the back, for our first time,' said Stella.
âSure.' Jay smiled again and patted us each on the shoulder. âIt's
great
to see you guys. Meet you after, yeah?' And he rushed off. He seemed so confident and relaxed in his natural habitat, not shy at all. It was Stella and me who'd turned awkward.
âI think you're forgiven,' I said to Stella. âI think your sins have been washed away.'
Stella pulled a face. âFunny. S'pose we'd better go in.'
I don't know what I was expecting â not so many people, that's for sure. The building was more like a big theatre than my idea of a church, with the audience in tiered seats facing a stage with another huge cross hung above it. Stella and I found seats at the back, and as soon as we sat down, music began to blast from speakers all around the walls.